Fine art photography, like science, is undergoing major transformations. Just as George Eastman's invention of roll film changed the world's artistic outlook, so too have Instagram and other communications technologies multiplied the possibilities for artistic expression. This retrospective, organized by genre rather than year, explores important categories such as camera-less photograms, self-portraiture, environmental portraiture, street photography, documentation, and abstraction. It contains examples of the groundbreaking work of photographers from Diane Arbus, Edward Weston, and Alfred Stieglitz to Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg, often grouping the artists together in unexpected ways. While it provides a brief history of the different genres, this is not a history book, but rather a study of the uniqueness of particular photographic visions in their time. It will inspire fine art photographers to challenge preconceived concepts, overcome creative block, and become part of the new avant-garde. AUTHOR: Paul Matte earned a bachelor of fine arts with honors in photography in 1984 and a bachelor of education in visual arts in 1985. He and his wife, Lise, live in Brockville, Ontario, where he is retired after thirty-one years of teaching students to be creative and to think beyond the obvious. SELLING POINTS: ? Explores the evolution of avant-garde photography from the 1800s to today, organised by genre ? Illuminates the historical and cultural influences on fine art photography from camera-less images to abstraction ? A go-to reference book for forward-thinking fine art photographers, by a professor of photography 139 colour and b/w photographs